[quote author="EvaLSeraphim" date=1253489432]I'm sure No_Vas will have some suggestions for which local residents may wish to do this sooner rather than later. ;-)</blockquote>
The Hitching Post II sucks. The real gem in Santa Barbara county is the Hitching Post in Casmalia.
<a href="http://www.hitchingpost1.com/">http://www.hitchingpost1.com/</a>
For the record, I've never eaten there. I've tried five times and been lucky enough to be there when the are closed each time. Call for reservations, or at least to make sure they are open. But what does any of this have to do with soil contamination?
<a href="http://yosemite.epa.gov/r9/sfund/r9sfdocw.nsf/7508188dd3c99a2a8825742600743735/c09ac6f2b42071b188257007005e943f!OpenDocument#descr">Superfund site much?</a>
<blockquote>The Casmalia Resources Superfund Site (Site), formerly the Casmalia Resources Hazardous Waste Management Facility, is an approximately 252-acre, inactive commercial hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facility located in Santa Barbara County, California. This Site is located 10 miles southwest of the City of Santa Maria, 1.2 miles north of the Town of Casmalia, and four miles from the Pacific Ocean.
Site History
Between 1973 and 1989, the Site accepted approximately 5.6 billion pounds of waste into 92 waste management or treatment facilities. These facilities included landfills, ponds, shallow wells, disposal trenches, and hazardous waste treatment units. During its operational history, more than 10,000 businesses and government entities sent commercial hazardous waste to the Site. The waste material accepted at the Site included sludges, pesticides, solvents, acids, metals, caustics, cyanide, and nonliquid polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The facility owners and operators were Casmalia Resources, Hunter Resources and Kenneth H. Hunter, Jr.</blockquote>
If you're trying to garden in your backyard I wouldn't worry about it, but then again, I'm not moving into the Villages of Columbus either.